The development of narrative skill has been investigated extensively in a wide range of languages, cross-linguistically and in multilingual settings (Berman and Slobin, 1994b; Severing and Verhoeven, 2001; Hickmann, 2004; Strömqvist and Verhoeven, 2004). The present study investigates the development of reference realization in narrative among Indigenous children in a remote urban township in Central Australia. The children, aged between 5 and 14 years, are speakers of a contact language, Wumpurrarni English. Language development is rarely investigated among speakers of minority languages, whose language development is often appraised in the majority language, with little attention to language performance in the speaker's home variety. The ...
Many Indigenous communities in remote Australia are multilingual, and often the languages being spok...
While the documentation of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages has attracted ...
© 2014 Dr. Rosemary WallisRural children have been underperforming in national Australian assessment...
Children everywhere learn to tell stories. One important aspect of story telling is the way characte...
While there is increasing international interest in approaching language analysis with the prism of ...
By necessity, many language documentation projects focus on the language of older speakers, and info...
This paper reports on a study in two remote multilingual Indigenous Australian communities: Yakanarr...
Purpose: The suitability of existing speech-language pathology assessments for Australian Aboriginal...
This article analyses the selection of person reference expressions in narratives in Umpila/Kuuku Ya...
Purpose: Children's oral language samples are regularly analysed in order to describe levels of lang...
© 2021 Wanyima WightonThis thesis reports on a small-scale, naturalistic corpus study of children's ...
This study investigated the characteristics of oral narratives produced by six Aboriginal children a...
This study investigated the characteristics of oral narratives produced by six Aboriginal children a...
This dissertation documents the emergence of a new language, Light Warlpiri, in the multilingual com...
Wadeye (Port Keats), a community of approximately 2500 people in the Northern Territory of Australia...
Many Indigenous communities in remote Australia are multilingual, and often the languages being spok...
While the documentation of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages has attracted ...
© 2014 Dr. Rosemary WallisRural children have been underperforming in national Australian assessment...
Children everywhere learn to tell stories. One important aspect of story telling is the way characte...
While there is increasing international interest in approaching language analysis with the prism of ...
By necessity, many language documentation projects focus on the language of older speakers, and info...
This paper reports on a study in two remote multilingual Indigenous Australian communities: Yakanarr...
Purpose: The suitability of existing speech-language pathology assessments for Australian Aboriginal...
This article analyses the selection of person reference expressions in narratives in Umpila/Kuuku Ya...
Purpose: Children's oral language samples are regularly analysed in order to describe levels of lang...
© 2021 Wanyima WightonThis thesis reports on a small-scale, naturalistic corpus study of children's ...
This study investigated the characteristics of oral narratives produced by six Aboriginal children a...
This study investigated the characteristics of oral narratives produced by six Aboriginal children a...
This dissertation documents the emergence of a new language, Light Warlpiri, in the multilingual com...
Wadeye (Port Keats), a community of approximately 2500 people in the Northern Territory of Australia...
Many Indigenous communities in remote Australia are multilingual, and often the languages being spok...
While the documentation of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages has attracted ...
© 2014 Dr. Rosemary WallisRural children have been underperforming in national Australian assessment...